The Manila Times

Despite the Olympic glow, half of Korea remains in darkness

- Post TheWashing­ton WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP ( C) 2018, WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

WASHINGTON: Watching the media fawning over the North Korean delegation at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, I recalled a picture that my old boss, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, kept under the glass of a of the Korean Peninsula at night. At the bottom, awash in light, is the free and democratic South. Meanwhile, the North is in complete darkness, save for a tiny pinprick of light in Pyongyang. The two countries, Rumsfeld would often point out, have the same people and the same natural resources. Yet one is glowing with the light of freedom, innovation and enterprise, while the other is enveloped in the total darkness of human misery.

Keep that darkness in mind while watching the North’s Olympic charm offensive at the games. Kim Yo- jong, the sister of Kim Jong-un, is not the “North Korean Ivanka.” She is the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department, a senior leader of the most brutal repressive totalitari­an regime on the face of the Earth. As one defector told

last year, “It’s like a religion. From birth, you learn about the Kim family, learn that they are gods, that you must be absolutely obedient to the Kim family.”

Any perceived disloyalty to the Kim family can result in a visit in the middle of the night from the offender, but three generation­s of his or her relatives, to a forced labor camp for life. North Korea’s system of “re-education” camps, which was recently mapped by satellite by the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, is the most extensive in the world. Under three generation­s of Kims, hundreds of thousands, if not millions, have been imprisoned and killed in these camps. Inmates undergo the most brutal forms of torture imaginable, including being hung on women are tied to trees while their babies are cut out of their bellies.

Yet the camps are simply prisons within a larger prison. The entire country is one giant gulag. Thanks to widespread malnutriti­on, North Koreans are between 1.2 and 3.1 inches shorter than South Koreans. And thanks to economic mismanagem­ent, 97 percent of the roads are unpaved. According to my American Enterprise Institute colleague, Nicholas Eberstadt, up to a million North Koreans died of starvation in the famine that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union. “It was the only time in history that people have starved en masse in an urbanized, literate society during peacetime,” he notes. North Korea’s people starve while the regime pours its resources into its messianic quest to deploy nuclear missiles capable of reaching and destroying American cities.

Even among the elites there is no safety. Last year, North Korea’s vice premier for education was executed for not keeping his posture upright at a public event. Defense Minister Hyong Yong Chol was pounded to of falling asleep at a parade. And if you wonder why those North Korean cheerleade­rs stay in such perfect sync, maybe it’s because they saw 11 North Korean musicians lashed to the barrels of anti-aircraft guns which were 10,000 spectators. “The musicians just disappeare­d each time the guns declared, “Their bodies were blown to bits, totally destroyed, blood and that, military tanks moved in and they ran over the bits on the ground where the remains lay.”

This is the brutality that Kim Yo-jong represents. Yet despite this cruel reality, the media could not help fawning over the North Korean delegation. Reuters declared Kim Yo-jong the “winner of diplomatic gold at Olympics.” CNN gushed how, “With a smile, a handshake and a warm message in South Korea’s presidenti­al guest book, Kim Yo-jong has struck a chord with the public.” NBC even tweeted a photo of the North Korean cheerleade­rs with the heading, “This is so satisfying to watch.” Seriously? NBC failed to mention that in 2005, 21 cheerleade­rs were sent to a prison camp for speaking about what they saw in South Korea.

Instead of normalizin­g the regime, this should be an opportunit­y to educate the massive Olympic audience about the realities of life in North Korea under the murderous Kim crime family that is pursuing the ability to threaten American cities with nuclear destructio­n.

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